1
Page Two
THE PILOT, Southern Pines, North Carolina
Friday, July 11, 19*1'
THE PILOT
Published each Friday by
THE PILUT, Incorporated,
Southern Pines, N. C.
JAMES BOYD, Publisher
NFJLSON C. HYDE, Editor
DAN S. BAY, Manager
CHAKLJ'^S MACAIXEY, AdvertlslnR
H«l«n K. Butl«r, Virginia Cr««l, Bessie
CUMron Smith, Charles Cullingford,
Associ&te«.
Subdcription Rates;
One Year J2.00
Bix Months $1.00
Three Months .50
Eiitered at the Postottice at South
ern Pines, N. C., as second class mall
matter.
THE POCKETBOOK
KNOWLEDGE
OUR OPPORTIMTY
TO SERVE
Moore count}’ has raised its
Service Orjranizations. This was
quota of $600 for the United
Service Organizations. This is
too vital a part of Uncle Sam’s
defense program to be neglect
ed. It was something those of us
who are not in uniform, not in
production jobs, could do to help.
In the words of District At-
tomej" Thomas E. Dewey, na
tional campaign chairman of the
U.S.O.:
‘The private life and the religious
guidance of our boys are not a gov
ernment function in a free country. (
True, they are the busines.s of gov-1
ernment in Xazi Germany. Comnum- ^
ist Russia, and Fascist Italy. But th.it ^
is the ver>’ thing to which we stand I
opposed. This function is part of the
sober business of preserving the es
sentials of freedom in this, our home
land— almost the last free country
in the world,"
The U.S.O. is a vote of confi
dence by the private citizens of
America in the armed forces and
the defense workers who are do
ing a job for them and who must
not be let down.
How can the U.S.O. remedy
the existing situation in the
towns adjacent to defense cen
ters? Its program is very defi
nite, and has been worked out in
close cooperation with Govern-
/N sntJk-es
IN The FIRSTsMonnfs
OF 1941 VMSe/KXJeM 7D
l&oo TANKS
110.000
MACHINE GUtJS 7l\
1600
one EA«w iVPev«?rrcfc <(eyi
uKe A viANO. yoo wRorf lettkh
By •Pi«vw6 ON -we ke/s •
Dn sweoe>j, AwiL bcvps are
AitACHep -ID "me osohrrs or
vverT c/fRS
IN ritf Mm ME root
■iMTgy, ufVM v,mcn n;
Y(s:-vaoNOf
r-EFL'Mpi a ff'Oii/■‘isa/T tS'S
ire cenT in wm /s
ALTH006H ONLV 5 PfR^ONS ARE NEEPEP TOMAN THE
AVERAbE Ct>A9r.TD-faA<t PtANE AtiOLfT 58 CMPIOyeeS
ARe INVOiVCC? IN fACH FLiC»MT, ACC0RC'IN6 tOONe
AIRLINE COMPAisiy
ABERDEEN
Laurence Farrell, of Camp Jackson,
s spending this week at his home
■lere.
CORRESPONDENCE
Wnx OF LATE S. A. SCOTT
i l-Tl^ED HERE FOR IPROBATK
A copy of the will of the late Sam
uel A. Scott of Mount Mope, West
Virginia, has been filed for probate in
the office of the C'lerk of Court of
Moore county. With the exception of
$200 a month to his sister, Mrs. A.
To The Editor:
May I write a nne m regard to the
Community Ucilding movement being
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hurley of Ar- gpo^gored by the Rotarians and the
ington, Va., arrived last Saturday |
ind are visiting in the home of Mr.
, T j ,,, i Goldsboro may have need for a
^u^eys parens, r. an rs. 'Community Building, Carthage and, p ujcholls, of Pittsburgh, Pa., the
Mrr7'T Johnson has returned organiza-1 i^^ome from the estate is to go to
home after spending some time In Southern Pines would use^^is wife and at her death a large
Cleveland. Ohio. She was accompanied I
by her aunt who will make here home ! ff^ I’h . | remainder is to be used
With Mr. and Mrs. Johnson. ^ their feet, I feel we would have no I 15 percent to Dav.s-
Linwood Pleasants returned J^ I ^tunrt Scho^
□ . . . j j. reation center. The Civic Club is riye percent to Round HiU cemetery
Richmond Monday after spending sev-' ^ „ .u ■ t u .t
eral days with his parents here. ^ 1 in Pennsylvania; 15 per cent 0 Ben
Eugene Kirk, .son of Mr. and ^rs,; temple A. A. O. N, M S. of
® , . . J fee for its use. It may be Civic Club charleston, W. Va., to be used ex-
Clay Kirk, left Sunday for a visit I , .v.. • vi
. ,,, ^ „ now in name only, as this years paid
with relatives in Washington, D. C.
Miss Ethelyn Graham of Durham Is
visiting Miss Loui.se Martin.
clusively for the relief of crippled
SIXAINS €r SANC
; up membership was just 80 women children, and five per cent to the ex-
and 3 men; but whose fault is that? ccutive committee of foreign missions
I (Incidentally, over half of these mem- qj Presbyterian cRurch to be used
J. W. Graham, who has been quite ! gf town.) It is'fo^ the foreign mission work of the
sick since Sunday has entered the struggling under a $2,600 mortgage * church.
Moore County Ho.spital for treatment, jj, need of paint and repairs.
Mrs. Glenn Caviness has accepted a Country Club, vital to the town, j o,o«7 M.VTTKI'^iSK.S M.VUK
position in the office of the Aberdern obtained and put in con-1 SIXt'E I’KtWECT ST.ARTKD
and Rockfish Railroad. 1 (jjtjoj, larger affairs. That needs j ,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Finch are mov- ^^^d done now. Those two ( -p^.o thousand and eighty-seven
mg the first of the week from the' ^.jtj, the much needed golf ; nattressos have been made in Moore
Alton McLean house on Southern ■ would meet all the needs of p^ynty to date under general .super-
Pines Road into the house on Raeford southern Pines, and would be all that vision of the Home Agent with the
the taxpayers could carry. i following .supervisors: Mr.s. W. E.
—A member of the Civic Club and a Kelly at Carthage, Mrs. J. B. McDon-
Taxpayer. Cameron, Mrs. Lillie Ciabtree
j Annie Thomas at Eagle
SKABOAKn VOSTKR W.VRXS Springs. In July a fourth center will
.\G.AINST FOREST FIliF.S jjp started at the Westmoore School
'Remember when a million
was a lot of money?
On June 30th, this year, the pub
lished statements of the ten largest
New York banks show total deposits
of more than 15 1-2 billion dollars.
Whew!
"Hey, Buddy, want a caddy?" a
bunch of doughboys yelled at a fel
low playing golf in Tennessee
dollars' North Carolina who have watched
her literary ascent with enthusiasm
will be interested in her latest suc
cess.
Another authoress wins her reward.
This time it is little Sally Metcalk
Eaton, the young granddaughter of
Mrs. Frances T. Keating of Pinehurst.
the Ten-year-old Sally won a prize for
other day as they trekked back from: her poem. "Airplane," from the Bos-
a hard day's march. ! ton Herald several weeks ago.
The fellow turned out to be Lieut-1
ment authorities.
In service clubs built by
I
and I
General Ben Lear, Second Army com
mander, who didn't seem to like it
much. He ordered them back from
whence they had come, to march by
the golf course in more orderly man-
leased from the Government in
more than 360 points adjacent!
to military, naval and defense] car registrations in the state
centers ail through the country | 7157 jj^ring june, compared
and in the overseas bases, thej^.^th 3^907 during June of 1940. Folks
U.S.O. will carrj forward thejgpg taking seriously tne reports there
nece.ssary welfare, religious, edll-i^ay be a shortage of new vehicles
cational, and social services. | the coming year. Thus far in
These services will be provided ■ 41,899 new cars have been reg-
to members of the armed | jgtered against 26,656 for the same
forces and to defense workers, 1 period last year,
both men and women. For it.
must be remembered that a
large proportion of the workers
in our new defense indu.stries
are women. The situation in
some of the communities adja
cent to huge new defense plants,
where there are no adequate wel
fare, recreational, or other mo
rale-building services, is diffi
cult. Grave likewise are tho
problems arising from the wide
spread migration encouraged by
the growth of defense industrie.-!
and military construction.
To meet these and other need.s
in each defense area, U.S.O. pro
grams will be carefully indivi
dualized locally. Cooperation be
tween the Government, the U.S.
O. oi'ganizations, and the local
communities will be directed to
seeing that the resources of each
are effectively used.
The Government will provide
the buildings. The U.S.O. must
turn to you and your fellow cit
izens everywhere for aid in op
erating the program.
In the Saturday B}vening Post of
June 28, under the title, "Pretty
Heady Stuff," is the name of Mil
dred Harrington. Mildred Harrington,
now Mrs. Peter Lynch of New York,
is a former Aberdeen girl.
A number of years ago Mildred
Harrington thought she wanted to
write. Some of her first efforts were
printed in the Moore County News.
Articles for the State papers follow
ed. and then before very long shj
found she could sell an occasional bit
of fiction or an article to some of the
women's magazines. The American
Magazine liked her work and she be-
) came one of the associate editors ot
that publication. Last week she
achieved the enviable position of a
Saturday Evening Post writer.
Mildred Harrington was a likea
ble girl and her many friends in
The magazine "Life” has on several
occasions caught a Sandhiller out in
some inteiesting spot where the ed
itor thought it worth while to chron
icle a story and print a picture. Not
long ago when the Folley family of
Aberdeen opened a copy of the popu
lar magazine they found they were
looking at Alwin Folley, a reserve of
ficer at Camp Grant, Rockford, 111.
Young Alwin was pictured with an
Army nurse. Lt. Hines, dancing at the
Rainbow Room of the Hotel Faust in
Rockford, and again as the couple
was leaving and heading back to
camp. The story featured the Aimy
nurse in national defense work and
her hours of recreation.
Road, recently erected by J. B. Ed
wards.
Miss Betty Martin Osborne of
Greensboro, is visiting in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Miller.
Mrs, E. L. Pleasants and Miss Fran
ces Plea.sants attended the funeral of
P. A. Murray in Cheraw, S. C., Mon
day.
Mr. and Mrs, J. B. Edwards spent
Monday in Charlotte.
amount of employment available this
year and to the fact that the county
commissioners have been tightening
clown on delinquents.
"I've never seen ji quieter 4th of
July holiday," said Deputy Sheriff
Charlie Dunlap in discussing the hol
iday from the standpoint of law vio
lations.
With thou.sands of people from all
over the country at the big celebra
tion in Carthage there were only a
few arrests, chiefly for drunkenness
the officer reported.
A poster emphasizing the destruc
tion caused by forest fires has just
been released by the Industrial De
partment of the Seaboard Air Line
Railway. CTiarles A. Gillett, Indus
trial Fore!»ter for the railway, .says
the po.ster’s .slogan, "Fire Destroys
with Mrs. Eula Scott as supervisor
MARKIAtiK I.U KNSF.S
Marriage licenses have been issued
from the office of the Register of
Deeds of Moore county to the fol
lowing: James Lewis Pollock of High
—Don't Let it Happen," should be' P«*"t and Hazel Elizabeth Brown of
•■'.dopted if the area is to have con- Hemp; George S. Grifffth, Seattle,
tinued prosperity. This is the sec
ond of a series of posters by which
Mr. Gillett hopes to acquaint tim-
berland owners and the public at
large with the railway's comprehen
sive forestry program aimed at per-
Npetuation of a natural resource
which can be made inexhaustible by
proper treatment.
Pi/of Advertising Pays-
Wa.shington, and Mary Fowler Spen
cer, Carthage; C. J. Fuqua of Bur
lington and Isabel Davis of Hemp.
Dr. J. I. Neal
VETERINARIAN
Southern Pines, N, C,
TWO WAYS
OF LIFE
This second World War fs a
war between two philosophies,
two ways of life, two diametri
cally opposed systems of govern
ment.
In every land which the Axis
has conquered, all liberty has
been ruthlessly abolished. The
free enterprise system, where it
existed, has been consigned to
the rubbish 'heap. Dissenters
have faced the firing squad or
have been sentenced to living
death in a concentration camp. A
whole continent has been chain
ed to the Nazi chariot, and the
peoples of a dozen nations, many
of them once democratic and
free, have been reduced to the
status of slaves. The individual
is nothing—the state ‘is all.
Our part in this war then,
whetjher or not we eventually be-
W, T. Huntley, who is on the sec
ond half of his tenth year as tax col
lector for Moore county, says that the
tax collecting business is getting bet
ter. A larger percentage of the tax
levy was collected last year than any
year since he has been in office, Mr.
Huntley said, and this year seems to
be doing as well is not better.
Mr. Huntley attributes the improve
ment to the greater than usual
enterprise — that democracy is
superior to totalitarianism. And
we can prove that in only one
way. That is by encouraging the
private enterprise system, under
fair and suitable government
regulation, to produce as it nev
er produced before. That means
that we mu.st encourage private
ly-owned industry — whether it
leals in electric pow'er or coal or
oil or manufacturing or any
thing else—to do the greatest
job in history. It means that all
evidences of totalitar'ianism in
this country must be suppressed.
It means that we must consist
ently oppose state socialism
wherever it appears, whatever
its manifestation. We are fig>ht-
ing for the right of free men to
engage freely in legitimate busi
ness under a free system. If that
right is lost we will suffer an
irrevocable defeat no matter how
great our military prowess.
Private enterprise is ready to
meet the test. The record of the
past is the promise ov the fu
ture. It is up to all men to prove
now that the Americaii way is
the winning way—and the way
come active belligerents, is to
prove to all the world that free j to eventual peace and security
enterprise is superior to slave!for all the people.
Gh^nmenl
SOCIAL SiCURITY
l/aiiHotbeBioufh
SOCIAL Security legislatioa
provides ufcguuds againit
miiformne in ■ small mcuure
—Iwt for complete security yoa
need more protectioo for your
family when you die, and •
definite plan M saving for an
■d^aie income in old age.
Hiis is possible with the Jeffeiw
900 Standard’s new SECURITVi
BOND which was specialty
signed to round out tlM pro-
gnm begun for you by your
govenuaent.
Insure your own Social Secui^
ity. Write oc 'pbooe today for
details.
DONALD A. CURRIE
Pinehurst, N. C.
II I I I Kn()\ MANDMMV
I II I l\M k Wl I ((IMI’Xv'
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THi Tiffany
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e Built-in Electric Oven Timer*Clock.
e Built-in Time Chime.
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e New Due-Speed Broiler—with new Broiling
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